Course Content
Introduction to Hand Safety
An overview of basic hand safety principles for offshore mechanical and maintenance crews. Includes common injuries, PPE usage, and essential safety behaviors.
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Tool Identification & Correct Usage
Identifying basic hand tools and understanding correct usage to prevent damage, injury, and incorrect mechanical outcomes.
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Tool Inspection & Pre-Use Checks
Identifying tool defects, wear, and unsafe conditions before use. Ensures crew members understand how to inspect tools and prevent equipment damage or personal injury.
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Safe Working Practices
Covers essential safe work techniques for using hand tools in offshore environments, including body mechanics, tool control, and working in hazardous or confined spaces.
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Hazard Awareness & Risk Control
Identifying tool-related hazards, understanding stored energy risks, spark and heat considerations, and performing proper risk assessments before work.
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Practical Scenario Exercises
Realistic offshore maintenance scenarios designed to reinforce correct tool use, hand safety, inspection steps, and safe working practices.
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Final Assessment – Basic Tools and Hand Safety
Complete the quiz.
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Basic Tools and Hand Safety

Inspecting Tools for Wear, Damage, and Cracks

Before any offshore task begins, tools must be inspected for defects. Damaged tools are one of the leading causes of hand injuries, equipment damage, and unexpected failures.

A proper inspection routine is essential for safe mechanical work.

1. General Inspection Principles

Every tool should be checked for:

  • Structural integrity
  • Cracks or fractures
  • Deformation or bending
  • Rust or corrosion
  • Loose or missing components

The inspection should take only seconds but can prevent serious incidents.

2. Visual Inspection Checklist

• Cracks and Fractures

Look especially around:

  • Handles
  • Jaws
  • Striking surfaces
  • Pivot points

Hairline cracks can rapidly worsen under load.

• Deformation

Signs include:

  • Bent handles
  • Twisted jaws
  • Rounded edges
  • Mushroomed hammer heads

Deformed tools must be removed from service immediately.

• Corrosion and Rust

Surface rust is manageable, but:

  • Deep rust = weakened structure
  • Corrosion pits can become fracture points

Offshore environments accelerate corrosion — frequent checks are essential.

• Loose Components

Check:

  • Rivets
  • Joints
  • Bolts
  • Socket retention

Loose parts can fail during use and cause injury.

3. Specialized Tool Checks

• Wrenches

Check for rounding of jaws and proper alignment.

• Screwdrivers

Inspect tips for damage or wear.

• Pliers

Ensure pivot points are smooth and not loose.

• Impact Tools

Inspect for mushrooming, cracks, and loose heads.

4. When to Tag Out a Tool

A tool must be immediately removed from service if any of the following are found:

  • Cracks
  • Severe rust
  • Bent components
  • Mushrooming on impact tools
  • Excessive wear
  • Loose fittings
  • Damaged or missing parts

Tag-Out Procedure

  1. Stop work safely
  2. Attach a “Do Not Use” tag
  3. Notify supervisor
  4. Remove tool to maintenance area

5. Importance of Inspection Offshore

Offshore installations present:

  • High humidity
  • Saltwater exposure
  • Constant movement
  • Heavy mechanical work

This environment accelerates tool degradation. Daily inspection is not optional — it is required.

Key Takeaways

  • Inspect tools before every use
  • Look for cracks, bends, rust, and wear
  • Tag out any tool with defects
  • Proper inspection prevents accidents and rework